The number one bib is usually reserved for the defending champion, but organizers have broken with tradition and handed it to the Trek-Segafredo rider.

“That Alberto chooses Spain and La Vuelta to call it a career is a great honor for the whole organization,” Javier Guillen, general director of the Vuelta, said in a statement.

“We are wholeheartedly grateful to the generosity he always demonstrated as a rider and that he shows once again with this decision. Alberto is — and will forever be — part of the history of cycling in our country and elsewhere.”

Contador is one of only six riders to have won all three Grand Tours, although two of his nine titles (the 2010 Tour de France and 2011 Giro d’Italia) were expunged from the record books because of a doping ban.